https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=3736
And i can certainly empathize with the effect on moral that developing free (and popular) software can have. All i can offer Clem and the Linux Mint team is that since the shift that took place in Windows 8 (GUI and the start of shifts in the underlying business model) i discovered and loved that Linux Mint was what it was, a near as you can get 'windows' experience under Linux. That is a really incredible achievement when you consider the multi-billions that slosh around MS as an OS developer! So don't give up hope, Linux Mint is perhaps more needed now than at any other time and seeing how MS wants to become the new 'Apple', this need is not going away anytime soon.
Still the main issue i wanted to talk about in this post was about GUI and where the idea that 'modern' GUI equates to one thing and not another, and why confusion reigns all across the computer, technology and GUI development sector due to one specific thing. Namely Windows 8 (link to W8 GUI example):
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Windows+8+des ... &ia=images
That 'flat tile' design has had a hugely disproportionate effect on GUI design (and application and website GUI design as a whole). I'm here to argue it has not been an overall 'good idea' and why i believe that to be provably true, and why as GUI designers we need to 'move on' from it as quickly as possible, despite the 'trend' being to turn everything into 'Windows 8 like' GUI. A quick wiki link to Windows 8:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_8
And in particular you need to scroll down to the 'Reception' and 'Market Share' sections to follow my line of argument here. Namely that flat 'modern' GUI design that has 'taken over' GUI design comes from one of MS's least popular OS releases, and so much so was it unpopular they released W8.1 (which reverted to the more traditional Windows style GUI) and stopped support for the original W8 release. So here we have a widely considered 'design failure' that has carried on reverberating that design all over the GUI design sphere (OS, application and website). This just makes no sense to me. Why are GUI designers still trying to 'Windows 8' the look of everything when it was actually very unpopular?
So i hope what i'm getting across is that Linux Mint should not feel the need to follow the crowd here, as it is likely in error or to put it another way an example of the 'tyranny of the masses' in relation to GUI design. Focus less on the 'modern trends' and more on functionality and stability please

And i probably need not remind people here why Windows 10 is as 'popular' as it currently is, MS aggressively ensured this was to be (and that was a large part of why i ended up here in the first place). Windows is not better (or more popular), and has not been better (or more popular) due to the design overhaul introduced in Windows 8, and they themselves are still rolling back from the errors they made in that shift in the first place. One day i'm hoping the GUI design guru's will wake up and smell the reality of all this and we can get back to having nice looking AND functional GUI.
So the main point of this post is to plea with the Linux Mint GUI team, and hopefully make a reasonable case, why they should not simply copy the modern trend in GUI design. Make your own path, keep Mint attractive and functional over what i consider mostly illogical GUI design shifts.
There is a bigger part to all this too, and Clem alluded to it in the 'google-fication' aspect. Modern day computer use is less about the user end experience of a computer as a tool (where things function in a logical and well learned manner) more than the exploitation of the user, either via 'search learning' what that user wants to see most (and then provides the echo chamber that is difficult to get out off) and gathering the users data to sell to third parties. We are fully in the era of where tech uses us, more than we use it. Linux Mint does not have to be part of that (and isn't), but that 'culture' and 'attitude' can start somewhere and could be as innocuous as starting with modern flat GUI design. Maybe

And if too much has already been changed, perhaps you could include a 'legacy GUI' option for those of us that really do not like modern flat GUI design
